Bangkok Post

Poetry and rap used to fight ‘unjust’ law

-

MUMBAI: On a recent balmy evening at a Mumbai sports ground, writer Varun Grover, a pink flower tucked behind his ear, read his new poem to thousands of people protesting against a citizenshi­p law.

“Dictators will come and go. We will not show our papers,” Grover, who has written lyrics for several Bollywood musicals and was the writer of Netflix’s flagship Indian show Sacred Games, told the crowd.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s new law grants citizenshi­p to followers of non-Muslim religions fleeing persecutio­n from India’s three Muslim-majority neighbours — Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

But critics say the law is Islamophob­ic and a threat to India’s secular constituti­on. The government says the law seeks to help persecuted minorities and it accuses its opponents of misconstru­ing it.

The nearly two months of protests, spearheade­d by students, represent the most concerted challenge to Modi and his Hindu-nationalis­t government since he was first elected in 2014.

The campaign has been championed by musicians and poets, both Hindu and Muslim, highlighti­ng the stand much of India’s liberal intelligen­tsia and artistic community has taken against the government.

“In the short term, songs or poems bind the protesters and keep the camaraderi­e going,” Grover, 40, told Reuters.

“In the long term, which I think is more important, it reminds those of us who are voicing our opposition why we aren’t like those who support this government.”

Grover’s Hindilangu­age poem, We Will Not Show our Papers, which he first posted on social media on Dec 21, has become a rallying cry for the demonstrat­ors.

It has been translated into several Indian languages, and is recited at rallies, and hashtagged on Twitter.

Rap and folk musicians have also rallied to the anti-government cause.

“There is a strong element of resistance to rap music — it was a symbol of protest against white supremacy, and it also feels relevant to the mostly student protesters,” said Shumais Nazar, a student at New Delhi’s Jamia Millia University, who has written rap songs for the campaign and performed them at rallies.

Nazar was at the university last month when police stormed in, firing tear gas shells as scores of students took shelter inside, in a night of violence that shocked many and galvanised the protests.

The police said they were going after “miscreants” who threw stones at them from the campus.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Shumais Nazar, a student of Jamia Millia Islamia university, performs a rap song during a protest against a new citizenshi­p law in Shaheen Bagh area of New Delhi, India earlier this month.
REUTERS Shumais Nazar, a student of Jamia Millia Islamia university, performs a rap song during a protest against a new citizenshi­p law in Shaheen Bagh area of New Delhi, India earlier this month.
 ?? AFP ?? A protester in New Delhi.
AFP A protester in New Delhi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand